F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Repairing an XPS after receiving a parking violation is not a good plan.

Repairing an XPS after receiving a parking violation is not a good plan.

Repairing an XPS after receiving a parking violation is not a good plan.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2
M
MrReXgame
Junior Member
9
06-24-2016, 09:07 PM
#11
It happened by chance. I attempted to pay via a mobile app, but being late for a meeting and in a hurry meant I missed confirming the transaction. After the meeting, I looked at my phone and saw a confusing error screen.
M
MrReXgame
06-24-2016, 09:07 PM #11

It happened by chance. I attempted to pay via a mobile app, but being late for a meeting and in a hurry meant I missed confirming the transaction. After the meeting, I looked at my phone and saw a confusing error screen.

R
rkmario
Junior Member
47
06-24-2016, 09:12 PM
#12
You recall an app that required starting when entering the car park and stopping when leaving. You didn’t remember to turn it off, resulting in a charge for roughly 15 hours of parking during your 3-day visit. There was no standoff or securing mechanism for the SSD. The thermal pads weren’t particularly sticky.
R
rkmario
06-24-2016, 09:12 PM #12

You recall an app that required starting when entering the car park and stopping when leaving. You didn’t remember to turn it off, resulting in a charge for roughly 15 hours of parking during your 3-day visit. There was no standoff or securing mechanism for the SSD. The thermal pads weren’t particularly sticky.

U
umizou1393
Senior Member
253
06-28-2016, 04:35 PM
#13
The standard screws and standoffs are holding the SSD in place. However, there appears to be slight movement in the middle of the drive. I’m uncertain about the exact cause since it should be quite secure. It’s possible the chassis is slightly bent. My assumption is that the compressed thermal pad between the chassis and the SSD reduces excessive flexing by limiting force and friction—though it isn’t very sticky. The pad here looks damaged and flattened, which may reduce its effectiveness without extra support.
U
umizou1393
06-28-2016, 04:35 PM #13

The standard screws and standoffs are holding the SSD in place. However, there appears to be slight movement in the middle of the drive. I’m uncertain about the exact cause since it should be quite secure. It’s possible the chassis is slightly bent. My assumption is that the compressed thermal pad between the chassis and the SSD reduces excessive flexing by limiting force and friction—though it isn’t very sticky. The pad here looks damaged and flattened, which may reduce its effectiveness without extra support.

S
Skotcher
Member
182
07-05-2016, 06:10 AM
#14
It seems a laptop offers more flexibility than a desktop, and the maker likely anticipated the problem by adding the pad. It probably isn't meant to solve thermal issues. My thought is it's mainly for stability rather than cooling. Is this a typical PCIe 3 SSD or even SATA type? If yes, it probably doesn’t require extra cooling. Since the machine didn’t fail after long use and still worked fine, it’s unlikely data loss happened—your IT team should have backups anyway. Probably just the bosses’ distractions if it overheats.
S
Skotcher
07-05-2016, 06:10 AM #14

It seems a laptop offers more flexibility than a desktop, and the maker likely anticipated the problem by adding the pad. It probably isn't meant to solve thermal issues. My thought is it's mainly for stability rather than cooling. Is this a typical PCIe 3 SSD or even SATA type? If yes, it probably doesn’t require extra cooling. Since the machine didn’t fail after long use and still worked fine, it’s unlikely data loss happened—your IT team should have backups anyway. Probably just the bosses’ distractions if it overheats.

G
goldenagate
Member
209
07-05-2016, 06:50 AM
#15
It's a common issue with this model. It seems to be from a Dell XPS 15 2 in 1 around 3 or 4 years ago, and PCIe 4 support likely didn't arrive until the Tiger Lake release last year. My boss mentioned seeing some gray or yellow residue coming out of the ports when cables were removed, suggesting the original connectors were deteriorating. That wouldn't be ideal for a premium laptop.
G
goldenagate
07-05-2016, 06:50 AM #15

It's a common issue with this model. It seems to be from a Dell XPS 15 2 in 1 around 3 or 4 years ago, and PCIe 4 support likely didn't arrive until the Tiger Lake release last year. My boss mentioned seeing some gray or yellow residue coming out of the ports when cables were removed, suggesting the original connectors were deteriorating. That wouldn't be ideal for a premium laptop.

T
Tom2Sop2
Member
139
07-05-2016, 11:00 AM
#16
Sure, but at least it doesn’t have a Mac running a 256GB SSD with 8GB of RAM built in.
T
Tom2Sop2
07-05-2016, 11:00 AM #16

Sure, but at least it doesn’t have a Mac running a 256GB SSD with 8GB of RAM built in.

F
Freedom_Men
Member
211
07-06-2016, 03:22 PM
#17
Absolutely correct. A simple way to take off the back panel and a quick 5-minute repair are far better than anything else. It makes me think about how our IT team managed without solving it for two weeks.
F
Freedom_Men
07-06-2016, 03:22 PM #17

Absolutely correct. A simple way to take off the back panel and a quick 5-minute repair are far better than anything else. It makes me think about how our IT team managed without solving it for two weeks.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2